Investigating the effect of cholinergic and adrenergic blocking agents on maternal-fetal heart rates and their interactions in mice fetuses

Author:

Khandoker Ahsan H.1ORCID,Wahbah Maisam1ORCID,Yoshida Chihiro2,Kasahara Yoshiyuki23ORCID,Funamoto Kiyoe1ORCID,Niizeki Kyuichi4ORCID,Kimura Yoshitaka2

Affiliation:

1. Health Engineering Innovation Center (HEIC), Department of Biomedical Engineering, Khalifa University, Abu Dhabi 127788, United Arab Emirates

2. Department of Maternal and Fetal Therapeutics, Tohoku University Graduate School of Medicine, Sendai, Miyagi, 980-8575, Japan

3. Department of Maternal and Child Health Care Medical Science, Tohoku University Graduate School of Medicine, Sendai, Miyagi, 980-8575, Japan

4. Department of Biosystems Engineering, Graduate School of Science and Engineering, Yamagata University, Yonezawa, Yamagata, 992-8510, Japan

Abstract

ABSTRACT This study examines the role of autonomic control of maternal and fetal heart rate variability (MHRV and FHRV) and their heartbeats phase coupling prevalence (CPheartbeat) in mice. The subjects are divided into three groups: control with saline, cholinergic blockade with atropine, and β-adrenergic blockade with propranolol. Electrocardiogram signals of 27 anesthetized pregnant mice and 48 fetuses were measured for 20 min (drugs were administered after 10 min). For the coupling analysis, different maternal heartbeats were considered for one fetal beat. Results show that saline infusion did not produce any significant changes in MHRV and FHRV, as well as CPheartbeat. Atropine increased maternal HR (MHR) and decreased MHRV significantly without any considerable effect on fetal HR (FHR) and FHRV. Propranolol infusion did not produce any significant changes in MHR and MHRV, but significantly decreased FHR and increased FHRV. Moreover, atropine had led to a decrease in CPheartbeat when considering two and three maternal beats, and an increase for four beats; while propranolol resulted in a decrease for two heartbeats, but an increase for four and five beats. The proposed approach is useful for assessing the impact of maternal autonomic modulation activity on fetal distress and obstetric complications prevalent in pregnant mothers.

Funder

Khalifa University of Science and Technology

RIKEN Healthcare and Medical Data Platform Project; Grand-in-Aid for Scientific Research; the Creative Interdisciplinary Research Project of Frontier Research Institute for Interdisciplinary Science

Publisher

The Company of Biologists

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology

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